Critical Companion to Dante

Critical Companion to Dante
Author: Jay Ruud
Publsiher: Infobase Publishing
Total Pages: 577
Release: 2008
Genre: Dante Alighieri
ISBN: 9781438108414

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Dante Alighieri is one of the greatest poets in world history. His brilliant epic, "The Divine Comedy", an imagined journey through Heaven, Hell, and Purgatory, continues to captivate readers. This work provides an information on his life and work. It covers Dante's canon, including his love poems in "La Vita Nuova" and his philosophical works.

Critical Companion to T S Eliot

Critical Companion to T  S  Eliot
Author: Russell Murphy
Publsiher: Infobase Publishing
Total Pages: 625
Release: 2007
Genre: Electronic books
ISBN: 9781438108551

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Best known for his works "The Waste Land", "Four Quartets", and "The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock," T S Eliot is one of the most popular 20th-century poets studied in high school and college English classes. This work explores the life and works of this amazing Nobel Prize-winning writer, with analyses of Eliot's writing.

The Cambridge Companion to Dante s Commedia

The Cambridge Companion to Dante s    Commedia
Author: Zygmunt G. Barański,Simon Gilson
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2019
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781108421294

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Accessible and informative account of Dante's great Commedia: its purpose, themes and styles, and its reception over the centuries.

The Cambridge Companion to Dante

The Cambridge Companion to Dante
Author: Rachel Jacoff
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2007-02-15
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780521844307

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A fully updated 2007 edition of this useful and accessible coursebook on Dante's works, context and reception history.

A Companion to Dante

A Companion to Dante
Author: Giovanni Andrea Scartazzini,Arthur John Butler
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 534
Release: 1893
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: IOWA:31858004689984

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Approaches to Teaching Dante s Divine Comedy

Approaches to Teaching Dante s Divine Comedy
Author: Christopher Kleinhenz,Kristina Olson
Publsiher: Modern Language Association
Total Pages: 212
Release: 2020-02-01
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781603294287

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Dante's Divine Comedy can compel and shock readers: it combines intense emotion and psychological insight with medieval theology and philosophy. This volume will help instructors lead their students through the many dimensions--historical, literary, religious, and ethical--that make the work so rewarding and enduringly relevant yet so difficult. Part 1, "Materials," gives instructors an overview of the important scholarship on the Divine Comedy. The essays of part 2, "Approaches," describe ways to teach the work in the light of its contemporary culture and ours. Various teaching situations (a first-year seminar, a creative writing class, high school, a prison) are considered, and the many available translations are discussed.

A Companion to Ezra Pound s Guide to Kulchur

A Companion to Ezra Pound s Guide to Kulchur
Author: Anderson Araujo
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 496
Release: 2018
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9781942954385

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Guide to Kulchur is paramount among Ezra Pound's prose works. In its fifty-eight chapters and postscripts, the book encapsulates his chief concerns: his cultural, historiographic, philosophical, and epistemological theories; his aesthetics and poetics; and his economic and political thought. Pound's guide showcases his subversive, irreverent alternative to mainstream culture - kulchur. This guide enables the reader to gain a comprehensive understanding of Pound's most far-reaching, iinterdisciplinary, and transhistorical polemic.--from back cover.

Dante and the Making of a Modern Author

Dante and the Making of a Modern Author
Author: Albert Russell Ascoli
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2008-03-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781139470704

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Leading scholar Albert Russell Ascoli traces the metamorphosis of Dante Alighieri – minor Florentine aristocrat, political activist and exile, amateur philosopher and theologian, and daring experimental poet – into Dante, author of the Divine Comedy and perhaps the most self-consciously 'authoritative' cultural figure in the Western canon. The text offers a comprehensive introduction to Dante's evolving, transformative relationship to medieval ideas of authorship and authority from the early Vita Nuova through the unfinished treatises, The Banquet and On Vernacular Eloquence, to the works of his maturity, Monarchy and the Divine Comedy. Ascoli reveals how Dante anticipates modern notions of personalized, creative authorship and the phenomenon of 'Renaissance self-fashioning'. Unusually, the book examines Dante's career as a whole offering an important point of access not only to the Dantean oeuvre, but also to the history and theory of authorship in the larger Italian and European tradition.